billydkid
Illuminator
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2002
- Messages
- 4,917
Let me see if I can say this so other people can understand what I mean. I am sort of a master of tortured writing and sometimes have great trouble expressing simple ideas. I do a lot of technicalish writing for work and I basically suck at it. Nothing seems simple to me. Be that as it may.....
I get Discover magazine, but honestly, I almost never read it. I happened to glance at the letters to the editor in this last issue and some people wrote in about a previous article involving the mind/brain issue. I'm guessing the article essentially confirmed that the mind is an emergent property of the brain and its chemical activity. At least one letter - obviously not from a stupid person - expressed the typical discomfort at the idea that "we" and the self are just the result physiological functions and not some independent entity merely occupying our bodies.
I have never understood this position in two respects. First, I have never grasped the idea that because something is attributable to physical/chemical causes and effects is somehow diminishes its authenticity and remarkableness - that the self somehow has less integrity and significance because it isn't supernatural. But the main thing that bothers me with this whole idea that the self should or could be independent of the body and worldly processes is that it implies either that it is dependent on other processes not of this world (and what would incline anyone to suppose there are such processes?) or that it is not a function of processes at all.
Now this latter, to me, is impossible even to imagine and completely nonsensical. It seems to me absolutely implicit in existence that there must be process. A mind is not a mind if it is not thinking and thinking itself is a process. Awareness is a process and any process has to happen via mechanisms of some sort. This same sort of issue arises when considering the notion of the supernatural altogether. If things are to be supernatural it implies that they are happening via some alternate set of processes that are not of this world or they are somehow happening by no processes at all. In as much as "happening" is a process itself, it seems to me that this idea just makes no sense whatsoever. If you accept the idea that "supernatural" things happen via some set of other worldly processes, what is it thats give these processes, in some peoples minds, more significance and meaning than worldly processes?
I apologize if this all sounds stupid to you and I've wasted your time. I'm sure there is nothing original in this, but does anyone understand what I am trying to express? my best, bdk
I get Discover magazine, but honestly, I almost never read it. I happened to glance at the letters to the editor in this last issue and some people wrote in about a previous article involving the mind/brain issue. I'm guessing the article essentially confirmed that the mind is an emergent property of the brain and its chemical activity. At least one letter - obviously not from a stupid person - expressed the typical discomfort at the idea that "we" and the self are just the result physiological functions and not some independent entity merely occupying our bodies.
I have never understood this position in two respects. First, I have never grasped the idea that because something is attributable to physical/chemical causes and effects is somehow diminishes its authenticity and remarkableness - that the self somehow has less integrity and significance because it isn't supernatural. But the main thing that bothers me with this whole idea that the self should or could be independent of the body and worldly processes is that it implies either that it is dependent on other processes not of this world (and what would incline anyone to suppose there are such processes?) or that it is not a function of processes at all.
Now this latter, to me, is impossible even to imagine and completely nonsensical. It seems to me absolutely implicit in existence that there must be process. A mind is not a mind if it is not thinking and thinking itself is a process. Awareness is a process and any process has to happen via mechanisms of some sort. This same sort of issue arises when considering the notion of the supernatural altogether. If things are to be supernatural it implies that they are happening via some alternate set of processes that are not of this world or they are somehow happening by no processes at all. In as much as "happening" is a process itself, it seems to me that this idea just makes no sense whatsoever. If you accept the idea that "supernatural" things happen via some set of other worldly processes, what is it thats give these processes, in some peoples minds, more significance and meaning than worldly processes?
I apologize if this all sounds stupid to you and I've wasted your time. I'm sure there is nothing original in this, but does anyone understand what I am trying to express? my best, bdk